Man whose truck was shot in Dorner manhunt paid $20,000 by Torrance

David Perdue was driving a pickup truck when it was rammed by a police patrol car before he was shot at earlier this year. Perdue holds the bullets from the incident.

David Perdue was driving a pickup truck when it was rammed by a police patrol car before he was shot at earlier this year. Perdue holds the bullets from the incident. (Robert Sheahen)

Joel Rubin

A surfer whose pickup truck was rammed and shot up by Torrance police during the frantic search for ex-Los Angeles police officer Christopher Dorner was paid $20,000 for the damage to his vehicle.

The payment comes more than six months after David Perdue, 38, was wrongly targeted by Torrance police Feb. 7 while driving toward the beach to surf before starting a shift at his job as a baggage handler at Los Angeles International Airport.

During the drive, a Torrance police cruiser rammed into Perdue’s truck and at least one of the officers in the car fired repeatedly at Perdue.

Perdue, a father of two, was not hit by the gunfire but sustained back and head injuries that have left him unable to work and with speech problems, according to his attorney, Robert Sheahen.

Sheahen lashed out Sunday at Torrance officials for the time it has taken to reimburse Perdue for the truck. More "outrageous," he said, was the city's handling of a lawsuit Sheahen filed in federal court against the city on Perdue's behalf.

Torrance officials have so far refused to allow experts hired by Sheahen to examine the truck, the attorney said.

He said the city also has stalled on any meaningful settlement talks, rejecting Perdue's latest offer to drop his case for $3.7 million and not budging from an initial offer to settle for $500,000.

"They have done everything they can to stonewall us," Sheahen said in a brief interview.

The officers who fired on Perdue were part of a massive dragnet across the region searching for Dorner. He sought revenge for his firing by the LAPD and wanted to kill those those he blamed for his downfall, he said.

Dorner died several days later from a self-inflicted gun shot wound after he was cornered by police.

The incident was similar to another one nearby earlier the same morning when Los Angeles police shot at another pickup truck. In that vehicle were a Latina mother and her adult daughter, who were delivering newspapers.

Despite police being on edge because of Dorner's vows to attack, the incidents drew sharp condemnation and raised questions about how the shootings could have occurred.

Dorner, who was a large African American man, looked nothing like the Latinas or Perdue, a small white man. And the pickup trucks they drove were different models and colors than the one police believed Dorner was driving.

The way the case has played out so far stands in contrast to the way Los Angeles officials handled the shooting of the newspaper delivery women. In that incident, the women received cash for a new truck in March and the following month settled their case for $4.2 million.

Torrance officials could not be reached for comment. Both sides are scheduled to be in court in October.